Word: d
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2010-2019
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...sucks. I’m going to prove you wrong”—but also from natural talent. “Though Patrick doesn’t have the extensive dance training that I and many of his other dancers have,” says Marin J. D. Orlosky ’07, a dance associate at the Office for the Arts at Harvard, “he has a unique gift for embodying dance styles—and sometimes even specific choreography—after only watching a dance a few times...
...didn’t realize quite how much I had to offer until I got here,” she says. “I thought I’d get bored with the acting scene quickly—I really haven’t.” Senior spring marks the first semester Friedman has taken off from performing in an HRDC show. She has hardly taken a break, however—her credits this semester include performances in Edges, a collection of student-written songs; three plays for the Harvard Playwrights’ Festival; the Annual 24 Hour...
...part of the Ballet Austin is that there’s a fairly long layoff,” Fuller explains. “I’d be interested in working with choreographers who are still finding their voice. I feel like in some ways that’s the most fruitful artistic relationship. It’s very open, very malleable...
...task force’s modesty concerning anything an educated person should know prevents it from establishing any sort of educational standard. If you were to read through the rest of the Gen Ed report, you’d find that the task force never does get around to saying whether there is any specific content whatsoever that an educated person should know. Officially, Harvard will not even broach the topic of whether specific information is necessary for education, let alone declare in what way excellence comes from academic study. In general, the language of this report centers...
University spokesman John D. Longbrake said in an e-mail yesterday that this trade was part of an investment strategy that is "no longer pursued" at Harvard Management Company, which invests the University’s endowment...